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Chandra’s ghost
Sure, media coverage was excessive. But that doesn’t mean the story of the Intern and the Congressman wasn’t — and isn’t — important.
BY DAN KENNEDY

MAGAZINE WRITER Charles Pierce was hanging out at a Boston-area TV studio last Wednesday, waiting to do a segment for ESPN News, when word came that the biggest tabloid story of 2001 had suddenly lurched back to life. "Right when I got there, the police in D.C. found Chandra Levy’s body in the park," Pierce wrote in a dispatch for Slate’s "Breakfast Table." "You should have seen the place. Instant Pundit Defcon 2! ‘Sweetheart, get me a former prosecutor, and make her a blonde!’"

As Pierce’s anecdote shows, last week’s news about Levy (or "the raven-haired beauty," as the New York Post inevitably calls her) seemed to unleash all the worst aspects of the old media order — an order that many observers had hoped would give way to something new, better, and more serious after the terrorist attacks of last September 11.

The story of the Intern and the Congressman — a story of sex, lies, and a mysterious disappearance — captivated the media for much of last summer. And though the question of whether Representative Gary Condit might have had something to do with Levy’s disappearance was hardly unimportant, the unbridled sensationalism with which it was covered marked a low moment for the media — which have, after all, given us so many low moments, from O.J. to Monica, from Princess Diana to JonBenét. At least that’s how the conventional wisdom had it. And now the story from tabloid hell is back.

"It was like being stuck in a time warp. Back to the days of All Chandra All the Time," Washington Post media reporter Howard Kurtz wrote last Thursday, the day after Levy’s skeletal remains were found in Rock Creek Park. "The same reporters, the same experts, the same D.C. police chief, the same pictures of Gary Condit, the same speculation, the same unmitigated excess as last summer, in that less serious, pre-9/11 world."

Syndicated columnist Mary McGrory lamented on Sunday that the media were all but ignoring the most important stories of the day. "But Washington is not focused on scandals in Enron or intelligence," she wrote. "Neither can compete with the police investigation of the case of Chandra Levy, a Washington intern with big hair and big dreams and an affair with her California congressman."

The break in the Levy story came just as the Project for Excellence in Journalism announced the findings of a new study that showed the Big Three network newscasts had returned to their pre–September 11 selves, cutting back on hard news and playing up lifestyle-oriented features. Just eight months after the worst terrorist attacks in US history — events universally regarded as being as calamitous and paradigm-shattering as Pearl Harbor — the media were right back where they started. Let the hand-wringing begin.

Well, pardon me if I can’t get all worked up about the big, bad media returning to their nasty, scandal-mongering ways. The media ethics surrounding the Chandra Levy story have always been more complicated than the finger-waggers would have it. No, the fate of the republic does not depend on identifying her killer. But let’s not forget that a member of Congress lied to police about his relationship with her. Those lies certainly impeded the investigation and at least theoretically could have reduced the chances of her being found alive.

Of course, the details of last week’s discovery suggest that Levy was dead before the police knew she was even missing. But the big unknown remains the same: whether Gary Condit knew she was dead before anyone knew she was missing. Because the lizard-like Condit remains a prime suspect, if not the prime suspect. District of Columbia police chief Charles Ramsey has refused to rule Condit out, and has also said that he might order that Condit be interviewed for a fifth time.

The tut-tutters never tire of pointing out that Levy is just one of hundreds of thousands of missing people in the United States, and that the media don’t care about those cases. On Larry King Live last Wednesday (most entertaining Larry question: "The discovery was made by a dog?"), Ramsey noted that, over the past couple of decades, 232 adults and about 100 juveniles have gone missing in Washington alone.

But in none of those cases is there a possibility that an elected member of Congress was involved in the disappearance. That doesn’t justify media excess in the Levy case. But it does justify tough, ongoing scrutiny. Yes, Social Security reform needs to be covered. (Yawn.) But let’s not pretend that a story about a congressman who may have murdered his girlfriend isn’t pretty damned significant.

OF COURSE, there’s a difference between the media’s taking their role seriously and just plain wallowing around in the muck. The absolute bottom of Chandra mania last summer was brought to us courtesy of the Fox News Channel, which actually put psychics on the set to discuss Levy’s fate.

As reported by James Taranto, who writes the indispensable "Best of the Web" feature for the Wall Street Journal’s OpinionJournal.com site, a "so-called spiritual medium" by the name of James Van Praagh turned up on Judith Regan’s show. Paula Zahn (before her jump to CNN) interviewed not one but two psychics, Rosemary Altea and Sylvia Browne. Give Browne a couple of points for accuracy, anyway. "This girl — I am sorry to tell you this, but this girl is not alive," she told Zahn. Even Mr. No Spin Zone himself, Bill O’Reilly, communed with Paula Roberts, whose parlor tricks include analyzing handwriting and speaking to the dead.

"Does Roger Ailes watch his own network?" asked Taranto. "Maybe it’s time he started, because the folks at the Fox News Channel desperately need some adult supervision." Well, maybe so. But at least Ailes didn’t give a talk show to Georgia state representative Dorothy Pelote, who — according to the Associated Press — told startled House members last summer that she and Levy had been having some heart-to-hearts across the great divide. "You know who I’m talking about. She has visited me. She has," said Pelote, who revealed that the dead had been dropping by for visits ever since childhood, when she was brought back from the brink of death in a near-drowning accident.

In part because of Fox’s antics, there is a perception that the Summer of Chandra was pretty much a cable-only phenomenon — that while Fox, CNN, and MSNBC chattered about Chandra nonstop, the august network newscasts remained above the fray. In fact, though it’s true that the cable outlets chewed up by far the most hours, the story was a cross-media phenomenon. According to the Tyndall Report, which tracks what the three broadcast-network newscasts are covering, Chandra got more minutes than any other story during a total of three weeks last summer and was number two on a couple of other occasions. The first of those number-one placings, in mid July, came even though Dan Rather and company were refusing to air the story at all on the CBS Evening News — a bit of over-fastidiousness far less defensible than the overkill that was taking place on NBC.

Chandra made her way into the daily newspapers, too, including the good ones. It’s a local story for the Washington Post, a convenient fact that has given the paper entrée to wallow in every last detail of the case even while Howard Kurtz and Mary McGrory (who’s based at the Post) lecture others for doing so. The Post, to its credit, hasn’t interviewed any psychics or engaged in the sort of rampant speculation indulged by some less-scrupulous news organizations (although it did break on its front page the story about Condit’s alleged affair with the 18-year-old daughter of a Pentecostal minister, which it later had to retract). Still, the Post’s obsession with the minutiae of the case has led to some odd moments.

Take, for instance, this paragraph, from a Hank Stuever piece in the Friday Style section about the park where Levy’s remains were found, headlined THE WOODS, DARK AND DEEP. Her body was found by a man walking his dog, looking for turtles — a development that Stuever, apparently in some sort of terrapin-crazed reverie, called "a smaller, far more benign kind of Rock Creek Park mystery, but a mystery all the same: Why turtles? What happens if the dog finds one? Does the dog hurt the turtles? Does the man take them home? Or do they just commune with the turtles?"

And hey, do turtles really taste like chicken?

Until last week’s discovery, the end point of the Chandra story appeared to have taken place late last August, when Condit submitted himself to an inept but aggressive grilling by Connie Chung, the fading ABC sob sister. (Salon had readers suggest questions that Chung should ask. My two favorites: "I hear you’re a fitness buff. Are you strong enough to lift something the size of, say, Chandra?" and "Are you smiling, or just showing your teeth?") There was something unappealingly déclassé about the whole thing — the sleazy, bug-eyed William Macy look-alike and the fallen network star, each hoping against hope that their pathetic encounter would lead to a career revival. (For Chung, at least, perhaps it did. Now she’s got her own primetime show on CNN and a chance of finally winning some respect.)

Condit’s relentlessly evasive answers to her mind-numbing repetition of the same three questions (Did you have sex with her? Did you kill her? Why won’t you answer my questions?) led even those who had previously assumed Condit to be innocent to wonder whether he really did have something to do with her disappearance. As Frank Rich wrote in the New York Times, "At a time when Americans are said to value authenticity above all else in their politicians, Mr. Condit is nothing if not authentic — an authentic creep. He didn’t apologize for anything. He didn’t express sorrow for the Levy family. He didn’t cry. And what thanks did he get for being so forthrightly a heel? Over and over politicians, pundits and citizens faulted him for not being phony enough — for not being as good an actor as Bill Clinton."

Then came September 11, and the Chandra story went into a deep freeze. Condit lost his re-election bid in the Democratic primary. And there matters remained. Until last week.

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Issue Date: May 30 - June 6, 2002
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